Lexington Books
Pages: 248
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-1-4985-6852-4 • Hardback • April 2018 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-4985-6853-1 • eBook • April 2018 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Christian Raffensperger is associate professor of history at Wittenberg University.
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Importance of Conflict
Chapter 2: Conflict as Bargaining
Chapter 3: Everyone Goes Home Alive
Chapter 4: The Kinship Web in Theory and Practice
Chapter 5: Iaroslav Sviatopolchich’s Kinship Web in Action
Chapter 6: Géza II in the Center of a European Kinship Web
Conclusion: Kinship, Religion, and “Nation”: Alternate Identity Issues in Medieval Eastern
Raffensperger goes back to original sources and engages in a lively conversation with preexisting research on Rus’ and other contemporary polities. . . . Although Conflict, Bargaining and Kinship Networks in Medieval Eastern Europe has a focus on Rus', it engages actively in the study of neighboring polities like Poland and Hungary, thus providing an overview of the region beyond national boundaries that, as the author notes, are more a modern imposition than a relevant concept for the time under study. Thanks to Raffensperger’s approach to doing history, Rus' becomes seamlessly integrated in the fabric of East European politics in the Middle Ages.
— The Russian Review
Raffensperger’s knowledge of the tangled familial relationships of medieval east European royals is unmatched. His familiarity with all the figures and their positions within the kinship web allows him to infer their goals and trace their interactions . . . overall Raffensperger has created both an interpretation and a reconstruction of events that must inform all future work on the topic.
— Slavic Review
Christian Raffensperger’s book is a major interpretation of medieval politics in Rus’. Raffensperger offers an innovative explanation of numerous conflicts among the ruling elite as a tool for bargaining between individuals, families, and clans. Raffensperger advances our understanding of kinship politics by convincingly demonstrating how the terms of kinship were challenged and negotiated during such conflicts. This study defies modern nationalism and isolationism by taking the reader to the fascinating world of medieval kinship networks that crossed national and ethnic boundaries.
— Sergei Bogatyrev, University College London
Another Raffensperger cannon ball through the conceptual wall between Eastern and Western medieval Europe. Conflict, Bargaining, and Kinship Networks in Medieval Eastern Europe takes great strides toward normalizing the history of Rus by replacing the image of incessant civil war with a story of bargaining for power through formalized, largely bloodless conflict within a relatively stable and functioning polity. Christian Raffensperger shows how in both the plastic use of kin networks and levels of conflict the politics of eastern European families resembled that of their western European counterparts. Let the walls come down.
— Leonora Neville, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Elucidating the necessarily trans-realm, regional nature of haute politique in eleventh- and twelfth-century Eastern Europe, with its continuously shifting family alliances within and across the borders of often unstable polities, Christian Raffensperger has crafted a meticulously researched, innovative monograph with an originally formulated leitmotif-concept—the ‘situational kinship network.’
— David Goldfrank, Georgetown University
Christian Raffensperger gives us a new understanding of conflict in medieval Eastern Europe. He explores the highly complex relations between conflict resolution and kinship networks. Original, theoretically innovative, vividly written, and well-constructed, this is a path-breaking work shedding considerable light on a key component of medieval politics in Eastern Europe.
— Florin Curta, University of Florida